This is why the humanities are, yet again, a superior study.University courses are very expensive indeed, if "only" because you need to pay all the staff and maintain all the buildings and grounds. All that specialist equipment would hardly come cheaply either.
Could you please elaborate?Looks like I have reasons to keep hating the EU.
This is why the humanities are, yet again, a superior study.
Could you please elaborate?
Looks like I have reasons to keep hating theEUBelguim (aka Sideways Germany).
Fixed !
Inno will be portrayed by Michael Caine when we do the live-action adaptation of his biography.Fixed !Looks like I have reasons to keep hating theEUBelguim (aka Sideways Germany).
Nissan super-plant pledge hands Brexit boost to Theresa May
Nissan plans to turn its Sunderland car factory into one of the biggest car plants in the world, producing two new models, after winning “support and assurances” from Theresa May about Brexit. The agreement with the government will safeguard the future of more than 7,000 jobs and delivers what will be perceived as a major boost to the economy following the referendum.
a proposal to offer state aid. The prime minister’s deputy official spokesman said: “The assurances are that we will get the best possible deal. There was no special deal for Nissan.”
The Guardian understands the government has privately told executives in the car industry that it is confident the sector can retain tariff-free access to the single market
https://www.theguardian.com/busines...n-super-plant-hopes-for-tariff-free-eu-access
Seeing EU stormtroopers savagely drown dissent in Wallonia in blood has surely been a sad sight.The problem with the EU is its institutional structure, it's not about any one single country. Not even the Germans, who just happen to be the ones most visibly playing the hegemon within it. The EU would still be inimical to democracy if they were not part of it.
What do people make of Theresa May's reassurance to Nissan that they will not be unduly affected by Brexit? Why does a car company get to know more about Brexit than either Parliament or the electorate? How can she even begin to make that assurance in the first place?